my reflective journal about online education

SEARCH THIS BLOG

About me…

My background is in Cosmetic Science and Complementary Health Therapies (Aromatherapy and Diet & Nutrition). For the past 8 years I have been working in pharmacy and medical settings. I work as a brand/medical representative; educating health professionals about the dermatological properties of the products that I represent. My job also entails a twist of marketing strategies and a lot of public relations.
I enjoy reading books related to personal development, writing, practicing culinary arts, online shopping, walking my dog and watching movies with my family.
My current interests are in the foundation of online teaching and learning.

Blog Stats

Spam Blocked

In a typical 7-day week, how often do you expect an online student to log in and participate in the course? What would constitute participation? (discussion – module 2 – UOM course)

Myself as an online learner, knew that I will be needing to be able to dedicate enough time to log in with regularity, daily for at least an hour, participate actively in the discussions and ready to meet time frames for the given assignments. Work more on the subjects in the weekend (6 – 8 hours in the weekend). Obviously this is subjective to the level of study that one is doing. Exactly like it would be expected from me if I would have been attending to a traditional classroom setting.

All this, is exactly what I think it should be also normally expected from other students too, and when one starts to think to how many hours people are being hooked to social media, it’s a very clear indication that the time spent on social media can be spent more valuable, as in participating in the online learning one has enrolled for. To justify what I started thinking, I then looked for tangible suggestions by universities etc, references are being made here under, (1) (2).

So then I also thought of looking for students experiences through online learning and in actual facts as it has happened in this study that I found (vide ref no 3 pgs 17 to 20) students more or less (most of time a bit less) dedicate the same amount of hours that I mentioned earlier.

In this study students are adult ones, which again goes to show that most of the time online learners will be adult students who must juggle the responsibilities of work and family, therefore motivation or as the students have recognise motivation as a need for discipline, obviously with online communication and assessment throughout the course. So here it goes, we have been addressing the need of motivating the student, the student must have innate motivation… guess the actual term should be framed as discipline is needed in order to succeed in the time management of online learning!

I’m putting the onus of responsibility and motivation on the adult learners here, it is also true that adult learners must be motivated to learn, however, the adult educator has the duty to maintain, develop and enhance this motivation. At times, s/he must create motivation when this is lacking in the students. Motivating learners is one of the key skills of the online instructor.

On my second week of my online course I ended absent in my participation, this was a perfect example for me that although I choose to be an online learner – my unpredictable working hours and being a parent with a child that needs continuous push in school matters – if I’m not disciplined and organised, all all this will still take its toll on this course!

‘You can take the horse to the river but you cannot make it drink’ – I like to use this expression as I find this very well suitable in the case of my child (who has very high IQ but lacks maturity to find a strategy in learning – the only way I finally found with him is being very disciplined and being there with him instead of my mum and pushing all the time!). In my job very similarly many adults that I train – I can see a distinctive attitude between those who want to receive info and those who don’t.

This idiom like to use it a lot of people who teach in a class setting too; experience from my better half who has been teaching and lecturing for about 20 years and these last 7 years he works with a private institute where teen’s parents pay a lot of money to study at this institution as their kids couldn’t make it to UOM so instead they are reading for UOL – he motivates them, even at an individual level and students really love him but only those who really want to learn make it – he coins out that the most successful ones are those whom their driving motivator is their aim in life and the need of the accreditation and especially those students who are working to pay their studies that succeed too!

So unless the students plan a study schedule to their online learning and strongly keep at it (disciple with themselves) won’t matter how much the educator can motivate them.